New York movies: The 100 best films set in New York City

From King Kong's spire down to the scummiest subway tunnel, TONY ranks the definitive list of the 100 best New York movies: crime dramas, romantic comedies, documentaries and more.

  • New York movies: Click to the next image to see our 100 best films set in New York City

  • New York movies: C.H.U.D. (1984)

  • New York movies: Awesome; I Fuckin' Shot That! (2006)

  • New York movies: Black and White (1999)

  • New York movies: Hi, Mom! (1970)

  • New York movies: God Told Me To (1976)

  • New York movies: Eyes Wide Shut (1999)

  • New York movies: Wolfen (1981)

  • New York movies: Man Push Cart (2005)

  • New York movies: Hamlet (2000)

  • New York movies: Three Days of the Condor (1975)

     

New York movies: Click to the next image to see our 100 best films set in New York City


Paradise and prison, bustling metropolis and the loneliest place on earth: New York City has a cinematic identity that infuses all walks of life. Even as we write our own narratives in this most famous of locations, we walk alongside fictional characters (and sometimes real ones, too, if we’re lucky).

In selecting the 100 most essential New York movies, we kept the city’s boldness in mind. TONY Film staffers David Fear, Joshua Rothkopf and Keith Uhlich teamed up with movie experts Stephen Garrett and Alison Willmore to gather titles from all genres and eras—the widely known and the obscure—in pursuit of a complete picture of NYC on film.

Our only parameter: The movie had to be set in New York City, not Metropolis (sorry, Superman fans), Oz (ditto, you Wiz diehards), nor anywhere else. Dive in, jostle politely, find your seat or ride standing: Please tell us what we’ve missed. It’s a big town.—Joshua Rothkopf, senior Film writer

100

C.H.U.D. (1984)

More funny than scary, this schlock-horror Z flick articulates a primal NYC fear harbored by anyone who’s ever peered down a sewer grate: Who (or what) is living below? Not the homeless, not alligators, but cannibalistic humanoid underground dwellers. As the poster of a shimmering Manhattan skyline warned, “They’re not staying down there, anymore!”—Joshua Rothkopf

 

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99

Awesome; I Fuckin' Shot That! (2006)

An essential New York band plays a landmark NYC venue (MSG) as 50 fans capture the event for posterity; only the Beastie Boys could turn a crowdsourced concert movie into a time capsule, a tour of the city’s musical styles (hip-hop, punk, Latin funk) and a tribute to the power of Gotham’s DIY spirit. RIP, MCA.—David Fear

 

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98

Black and White (1999)

James Toback’s giddy ensemble drama transforms the city into an urban playground where rich white kids play-act ghetto fabulousness, criminals consort with moguls and Brooke Shields sports dreadlocks. It’s a bold think piece on the malleability of class and race in NYC, spiced with the single most sizzling sex scene ever set in Central Park.—David Fear

 

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97

Hi, Mom! (1970)

Brian De Palma’s darker-than-dark comedy stars Robert De Niro as a XXX-rated filmmaker wanna-be who peeps on his neighbors. The no-budget film captures porn-theater-era New York at its seediest; it also features an astonishing sequence satirizing downtown experimental theater, in which a white-bread audience is viciously humiliated (and they love it).—Keith Uhlich

 

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96

God Told Me To (1976)

Larry Cohen’s sci-fi chiller about a detective investigating murderers who claim to be carrying out God’s will is the surreal B-side to Taxi Driver: a nightmare vision of the city’s repressed rage that starts with cameoing Andy Kaufman gunning down the St. Patrick’s Day parade and ends with our hero becoming what he was trying to stop.—Alison Willmore

 

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95

Eyes Wide Shut (1999)

Stanley Kubrick’s polarizing swan song takes place in a Manhattan of the mind, specifically the sexually frustrated brain stem of Tom Cruise’s upper-crust physician. The film’s fantasy Greenwich Village, populated by taunting fratboys, a hard-sell hooker and a Lolita-like teen is especially weird—and disquieting.—Keith Uhlich

 

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94

Wolfen (1981)

Long before it was cool to go green, Woodstock director Michael Wadleigh helmed this environmentally conscious (though still pretty damned scary) werewolf movie. The South Bronx provides some memorably decayed, practically postapocalyptic terrain, and a number of vertigo-inducing scenes are shot atop the Brooklyn and Manhattan Bridges.—Keith Uhlich

 

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93

Man Push Cart (2005)

Indie filmmaker Ramin Bahrani provides an eloquent, empathetic backstory to a pushcart vendor so street-corner standard, he’s all but invisible to passersby. Bahrani explores the fictional man’s past as a Pakistani rock star and his lonely, lowly present in a New York that’s both beautiful and coolly indifferent to his Sisyphean struggle.—Alison Willmore

 

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92

Hamlet (2000)

Michael Almereyda transposes William Shakespeare’s seminal tragedy to the world of high finance as Ethan Hawke’s brooding prince goes up against his slick CEO stepfather. The modern-day setting—moving from grungy streets to antiseptic boardrooms and even that cylindrical mousetrap the Guggenheim—adds thematic heft to the greatest of all plays.—Keith Uhlich

 

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91

Three Days of the Condor (1975)

Filmed at the peak of Hollywood’s political paranoia, this CIA thriller captures a tense, spy-saturated NYC that would reappear in The Bourne Ultimatum. Choice local touches include Robert Redford’s clandestine office on 77th Street at Madison, a quiet Brooklyn Heights getaway (occupied by sultry Faye Dunaway) and a WTC window overlooking the intrigue.—Joshua Rothkopf

 

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Comments & ratings

Rated as: 3/5 (31 ratings)
  • The Way We Were???? It is arguably the greatest cinematic love story of all time with the final heartbreaking scene played out in front of the iconic Plaza. Sex and the City even did an homage to this great movie.

    John Tue Jul 17 2012
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  • Where Is Gangs Of New York And West Side Story.

    Steven815 Tue Jul 17 2012
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  • How Is Gangs Of New York Not Listed.

    Steven815 Tue Jul 17 2012
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  • Please let Ms whitmore know that when THE FRENCH CONNECTION was filmed, it was the B train (west end) that was running through that part of Brooklyn.

    Marvin Tue Jul 17 2012
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  • The Godfather is quite possibly the greatest film of all time, and you've got only ranked in the 40s for films set in New York? Something is terrible wrong here. Take this list seriously? Fuhgeddabout it!

    Ben Tue Jul 17 2012
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  • You crazy dudes! Omitting the best "Manhattan destroyed by monster" movie ever..."Cloverfield". Horribly under-rated, brilliantly done.

    George Tsiolis Tue Jul 17 2012
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  • I have looked through the list a couple of times now, and while I think is good (I don't know many of the movies) I will say that if a movie is to portray NYC in a variety of ways socially and historically, I think (at least) three movies are missing: Moonstruck The Age of Innocence and Gangs of New York I also really like the atmosphere in You've Got Mail. Most of all (and I don't even live in (or am from) the US), I think a movie almost always gets better just by being set in NYC - one of my favourite places in the world!

    MLE Tue Jul 17 2012
    Rated as: 3/5
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  • Moonstruck, which should be in the top 10, is somehow missing...

    John Futty Tue Jul 17 2012
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  • I have to say that there are some far better films missing from this list and ones that shouldn't even be in the list, such as Eyes Wide Shut, which was shot in England and Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle, which was shot in Canada! As such, On the Set of New York.com will be producing a Top 100 NYC films that do not just include the typical trendy films that usually appear in lists such as these. I have to admit, I was shocked not to see The Seven Year Itch and Crocodile Dundee and Die Hard 3 missing from the list. Check out www.onthesetofnewyork.com for over 700 NYC films.

    Mark Sun Jul 15 2012
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  • No Coming to America????? Shame!!!!!

    Ivan Sun Jul 15 2012
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